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The Peasantry Before October . Classes and Categories within the Peasantry. Landowners Kulaks-own property (tools, cattle, some land) Highered landless peasants Muzhik (peasant) Farm hands-wage workers Renters- (like sharecroppers). Timeline of Tactics of Peasantry.
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Classes and Categories within the Peasantry • Landowners • Kulaks-own property (tools, cattle, some land) • Highered landless peasants • Muzhik (peasant) • Farm hands-wage workers • Renters- (like sharecroppers)
Timeline of Tactics of Peasantry • February through Spring 1.Renter struggles against landowner • “alleviation to the conditions of rent” (10) 2.Wage/working condition struggles against boss • “for an improvement in the conditions of labor” (10) • “In the first stage, the peasants were still accommodating themselves to the new regime, and trying to solve their problems by means of the new institutions.” (3) • Much leadership from Kulaks (wealthier peasants)
Summer months (July) • Generalize to struggles of whole villages taking wealth and property of possessing classes • Participation and building of representative organizations • “Seizure of meadows, of crops, of food-stuffs and fodder, of ploughed fields, of implements; conflict over the conditions of employment; destruction of manors.” • Kulaks opportunistically choosing which side to take (lower peasant or landowners)
September and October • Escalated intensity but less organization • More destructive • More widespread • “Out of 481 counties, 439, or 91 per cent, were drawn into the peasant revolt” (3)
“From various forms and degrees and pressure, the peasants are now passing over to a violent seizures of the various parts of the landlord’s business, to the extermination of the nests of the gentility, the burning of manors, even the murder of proprietors and overseers.” (7) • “In the autumn crisis the peasants did not abandon conscious action of spontaneity, but abandoned comprimisist leadership for the civil war, the decline in organization was really a superficial feature: the comprimisist organization fell away but what was left was by no means a vacant space.”
What caused the escalation of tactics? • Soldiers returning from the front and workers returning home • Hunger, worsening of material conditions • No success through struggle in Social Revolutionary “compromiser” state structures
Why were many tactics destructive not productive? • “We must destroy everything so that in case anything happens our enemy will have no place to hide.” (9)
Interactions between the peasantry and the urban proletariat • Soldiers returning from war • Workers being let go in factories and going back to their home villages • Wages of urban workers going to maintain peasant families • Bolshevik strategic agitation of peasantry • “between April 1917 and January 1, 1918, the peasant soviet in Petrograd sent 1,395 agitators into the villages with special mandates; and about the same number without mandates…mere drops in the peasant ocean. An infinitely greater work was accomplished by those hundreds of thoughts and millions of soldiers who quit the front and the read garrison of their own accord with the strong slogans of mass-meeting speeches ringing in their ears.” (14)
Bolshevik policy/orientation towards Peasantry- APRIL • Lenin pushing for farm-hand Soviets • “In April Lenin…insisted upon the creation of special soviets of farm hand’s deputies, and upon independent organizations of the poorest peasantry.” • Initially dismissive-why? • Less productive, more destructive tactics • Less organization, more spontaneity • More class collaboration with Kulaks • Not proletariat • “Their industrial isolation makes the peasants so determined in struggle with a concrete landlord, impotent before the general landlord incarnate in the state.” (12)
Bolshevik policy/orientation towards Peasantry- SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER • Political line • “The Bolsheviks were saying to the peasants: the soviets must seize the power, give you the land, end the war, demobilize industry, establish workers’ control of production, and regulate the price relations between industrial and agricultural products.” (18)
Bolshevik policy/orientation towards Peasantry- SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER • Tactics • Proletariat send to home villages to agitate • Published a peasant newspaper • “The general agitation of the Bolsheviks undoubtedly nourished the civil war in the country. But wherever the Bolsheviks had succeeded in putting down firm roots, they naturally tried, without weakening the assault of the peasants, to regulate its forms and decrease the amount of destruction” (18) • Creation of “Worker to Peasant commissions-tools for peasants
Trajectory of Political orientation of Peasantry • Had long alliance with social revolutionaries who had stronger platform on peasantry • Social Revolutionary “comprimisist” government didn’t answer to demands for land and through this found shared enemy in the “bourgeoisie”
Agreed w. Bolsheviks platform • “Under the influence of Social revolutionary agitation the peasants were still hostile to the Bolsheviks, but in practice they decide the questions of land and power in a Bolshevik manner.” (13) • Eventually signed on to Bolshevik demands • “The power throughout all of Russia ought to go…to the Soviets of Workers, Peasants and Soldiers’ Deputies.” (21)
Contradiction between the peasantry and the proletariat • Peasantry-Democratic/Bourgeois Agrarian Revolution (in final weeks/months shift) • From feudalism to capitalism • Various layers of oppressed peasantry (landowning and wage-earning) against large feudal landowners • “the peasant movement of 1917 was directed in it’s social foundations not against capitalism, but against the relics of serfdom” (12) • Proletariat- Socialist Revolution • From capitalism to socialism • Urban proletariat (single class) against capitalists
Peasant and Proletariat Revolution Mutual Necessity • “There was not the slightest possibility that in the circumstances of a peasant war headed by the workers, the army would permit itself to be thrown against the insurrection in the cities.” (16) • “In order that the peasant might clear and fence his land, the worker had to stand at the head of the state: that is the simplest formula for the October Revolution.” (25)
“The Bolsheviks were saying to the peasants: the soviets must seize the power, give you the land, end the war, demobilize industry, establish workers’ control of production, and regulate the price relations between industrial and agricultural products.” (18) • Was the peasantry really bought into Bolshevik politics? Why would they sign on to the Bolshevik platform if not? Were they misled in any way? Were the Bolsheviks at all opportunistic in their orientation to the peasantry?”
“In April Lenin…insisted upon the creation of special soviets of farm hand’s deputies, and upon independent organizations of the poorest peasantry. Month by month is because clear however, that this part of the Bolshevik policy would not take root…To explain this merely by the backwardness of the farm hands and the poorest strata of the villages, would be to miss the essence of the thing. The chief cause lay in the substance of the historic task itself—a democratic revolution.” • Was the fact that two revolutions from two different economic systems were happening at the same time contribute to the challenges of the Soviet Union? Was the contradiction a pivotal explanation for it’s failures?
Why does Trotsky wait until the 3rd volume to discuss the peasantry and only does so for one chapter?